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Query: UMLS:C0002622 (amnesia)
5,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Parturients in whom meperidine HCl, propiomazine HCl, and scopolamine were used for analgesia and amnesia in labor and delivery were studied to determine the efficacy and safety of physostigmine reversal after delivery. Of a total of 120 patients, 108 received physostigmine salicylate at the completion of episiotomy closure, awakening in an average of 7.5 minutes compared with 137.8 in 12 controls. Physostigmine appears to be a safe, rapidly effective agent for reversing the prolonged somnolence of this sedation regimen.
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PMID:Physostigmine reversal of sedation in parturients. 0 75

Premedication with lorazepam (4 mg), diazepam (10 mg), and a placebo was compared in a randomized, double-blind study of 95 adult surgical patients. Comparisons were made of recall of a memory card and events of the operative day, relief of anxiety, degree of somnolence, effects on blood pressure and heart rate, and incidence of side effects. Lorazepam produced a significant lack of recall (antegrade amnesia) compared to the other agents. Lorazepam produced a greater antianxiety effect than placebo and a greater degree of somnolence than diazepam or placebo. Since no adverse effects on blood pressure or heart rate occurred, lorazepam appears to show promise as a premedicant.
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PMID:Lorazepam premedication: lack of recall and relief of anxiety. 1 17

Lorazepam is recognized as a tranquillizer. It is presented for intramuscular and intravenous injection. In a study of this drug's possible effects in premedication, its action was studied systematically when it was used for preoperative premedication. The drug has no side-effects other than drowsiness, which occurs in almost all cases. It produces very good premedication, sometimes with anterograde amnesia in the doses used. This anterograde amnesia is dependent on the dosage used but it is always accompanied by profound drowsiness, from which the patient can be roused verbally. The dose will be selected in relation to whether amnesia is desired or not. However, whatever the dose administered (over 2.5 mg), the tranquillizing effect is always of high quality.
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PMID:Intramuscular premedication with lorazepam. 1 99

Studies in man show that it is possible to reliably study the incidence, degree and duration of amnesia produced by drugs by showing patients 10 postcards and testing their ability to recall or recognise them six hours later. Using this method of study it was found that 1 mg flunitrazepam produced a comparable degree of amnesia to 10 mg diazepam, although its action was slightly longer. This difference was more marked when double doses were studied. The onset of the amnesic action of both drugs occurred within 2 minutes of their intravenous injection and rarely persisted for more than 10-15 minutes. In contrast, with 4 mg lorazepam the onset of amnesia was slower and persisted for up to 270 minutes. This was accompanied by a moderate but not excessive amount of drowsiness. Possible clinical uses for such a drug deserve serious consideration.
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PMID:The amnesic action of diazepam, flunitrazepam and lorazepam in man. 1

Patients with daytime sleepiness present altered states of consciousness. The occurrence of these states impairs their professional, social and familial activities and may threaten life itself. The automatic behavior syndrome is characterized by continuation of mechanical activity and complete amnesia. Episodes lasting from a few seconds to several hours are correlated with repetitive micro-sleep periods. During cataplectic attacks, patients may have a meshing of reality with hallucinatory dream contents. Sleep-induced apnea may lead to abnormal movement and abnormal ambulation during sleep as well as hallucinations in the early morning. These altered states of consciousness must be considered as diagnostic indexes in differentiating epileptic syndromes from syndromes of daytime sleepiness.
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PMID:Altered states of consciousness in disorders of daytime sleepiness. 118 38

The "revolution" in pharmacologic treatment of insomnia began in 1970 with the availability of flurazepam, the first of the benzodiazepine hypnotics. Flurazepam largely replaced all other hypnotics during the decade of the 1970s. The second revolution began in the early 1980s as shorter half-life hypnotics, triazolam and temazepam, became available and began to replace flurazepam. The decade of the 1990s will probably see a more balanced pattern of benzodiazepine hypnotic use, as well as use of newer nonbenzodiazepine hypnotics. Among available benzodiazepines, all have the capacity to produce dose- and concentration-dependent sedation, drowsiness, performance impairment, and amnesia. Benzodiazepine-induced amnestic effects are characterized by either impairment of information acquisition, impairment of consolidation and storage, or both. In general, apparent clinical differences among benzodiazepine hypnotics are explained by differences in pharmacokinetic properties of absorption, distribution, elimination, and clearance.
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PMID:Pharmacology of benzodiazepine hypnotics. 131 29

The purpose of this study was to identify EEG changes associated with low-dose propofol infusion producing only sedative effects, and to describe the memory effects of low-dose propofol infusion. Ten healthy volunteers underwent EEG monitoring (at Fz, Cz, Pz and Oz electrode sites) before, during and after propofol 0.5 mg kg-1 i.v. bolus and 75 micrograms kg-1 min-1 as an infusion. Mean serum concentration of propofol during infusion was 0.86 (SD 0.14) micrograms ml-1. The EEG changed significantly during infusion, with increased power in the beta 1 (15-20 Hz), beta 2 (20.5-30 Hz) and delta (1-3.5 Hz) frequencies. Beta 1 and beta 2 power changes were most marked at the Fz and Cz electrodes. Subjects were sedated, but able to complete cognitive tasks. Visual analogue scales of attention and sleepiness were obtained throughout the study and demonstrated a sedative effect during propofol infusion, but were not a significant factor in memory performance or EEG changes. A verbal learning task (Rey Auditory-Verbal Learning Task) administered before, during and after infusion showed a marked reduction in short-term memory capacity and dramatically impaired free recall and recognition during infusion. Nine of 10 subjects had partial amnesia for complex visual scenes presented during infusion, recalling less than 50% of the material. Stronger cueing was required to retrieve information presented during propofol infusion, with an increase in mean retrieval time from 95.4 (41.2) s to 426.8 (83.1) s. EEG and memory effects resolved quickly after the end of infusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:EEG and memory effects of low-dose infusions of propofol. 138 41

Alterations in the level of consciousness may render the interpretation of the memory test results from the intracarotid amobarbital procedure difficult. The present study was designed to investigate the impact of inattention and somnolence on memory performance during the Amytal test. Nineteen consecutive patients undergoing the test were investigated. The memory test was constructed to comprise two consecutive parts with identical design, so as to make possible comparisons over time in the same patients. Reaction level and somnolence were continuously assessed during the procedure and a stimulus-task response test to evaluate the degree of attention was used. On the basis of these parameters a compound 'inattention score' was constructed. The results indicate that inattention and somnolence negatively influence memory performance and should be taken into account when evaluating the Amytal memory test results. In cases with poor memory results high inattention scores may speak in favour of preoperative hemisphere memory testing or a repeat injection with reduced Amytal dosage before deciding upon the extent of a planned resection. On the other hand, low inattention scores together with amnesia for the testing procedure may indicate that the memory test results can be relied on.
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PMID:A compound score for estimating the influence of inattention and somnolence during the intracarotid amobarbital test. 139 50

We report a patient with encephalitis who showed anterograde and retrograde amnesia with MRI abnormalities localized in the bilateral amygdala (AM) and hippocampus (HIPP). A 25-year-old man suddenly experienced a generalized tonic-clonic seizure (GTCS). He was admitted because of increasing lethargy with two further GTCSs during the following 6 days. The patient had high fever, and neurological examination revealed somnolence, disorientation, amnesia, and nuchal stiffness. MRI revealed bilateral symmetrical abnormalities localized in the AM and HIPP, which showed low intensity on T1-weighted images and high intensity on T2-weighted images. Cerebrospinal fluid examination showed a mildly elevated cell count. We suspected herpes simplex virus type I encephalitis and began treatment with acyclovir. After the patient regained a clear consciousness, his antero- and retrograde amnesia continued for several months. The MRI abnormality became less distinct with the improvement of amnesia. We consider that the MRI abnormality was indicative of inflammation and edema, and that the lesion in the AM and HIPP had induced the amnesia.
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PMID:[A case of encephalitis with MRI abnormalities localized in the bilateral amygdala and hippocampus]. 141 42

Culture-bound syndromes have been described worldwide in many individuals and, for certain syndromes, in epidemic proportion, yet these disorders have been classified as rare and exotic conditions warranting minimal attention. Development of the fourth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and the tenth edition of the International Classification of Diseases offers an opportunity for providing a more sophisticated classification of these phenomena. The authors examine amok, a syndrome first described in Malaysia that consists of homicidal frenzy preceded by a state of brooding and ending with somnolence and amnesia. They discuss the concept of and criteria for a culture-specific disorder and propose that amok be classified as a culture-specific explosive behavioral disorder in DSM-IV.
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PMID:Classification of amok in DSM-IV. 850 87


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